Voices of Children on Movement Behaviours in the Early Years: Reflections from Six Diverse Country Settings

IF 3.9 2区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
K. E. Kariippanon, Guan Hongyan, Nicolas Aguilar-Farias, A. El Hamdouchi, H. Lubree, C. Draper
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Abstract

Little is currently known about young children’s perceptions and experiences of 24-hour movement behaviours (physical activity, sedentary behaviour, sleep), yet their voices play an important role in contributing to our understanding and ensuring that appropriate action is taken to promote healthy behaviours. With the release of the World Health Organisation’s Guidelines for physical activity, sedentary behaviours and sleep for children under 5 years of age, interest is gathering to examine how young children globally perceive and experience these movement behaviours in their daily lives. Conducting qualitative research with young children, however, presents a host of challenges including identifying suitable methods (interview type), developing appropriate questions (terminology, translation), building rapport (presence of caregivers/educators, incentives), and managing power dynamics, while adjusting to the restrictions imposed by COVID-19. Additional layers of complexity come into play when conducting an international study across culturally, linguistically, and socioeconomically diverse populations. This article describes the reflections of our research group as we considered the effect of diverse contextual influences in Australia, Chile, China, India, Morocco and South Africa, on how movement behaviours are conceptualised by young children. The complexities of working across these diverse contexts is discussed and the implications this has for methodological decisions and data interpretation are reflected upon. While the WHO Guidelines (2019) are universal, globally young children experience considerable differences in how their days are structured, along a continuum of highly supervised to independent play, with varying degrees of agency to make choices regarding their experience of movement behaviours. This suggests the need for a nuanced approach in how we further research and address movement behaviours across different country contexts, taking into consideration social and cultural norms.
儿童早期运动行为的声音——来自六个不同国家背景的思考
目前对幼儿对24小时运动行为(身体活动、久坐行为、睡眠)的感知和经历知之甚少,但他们的声音在帮助我们理解和确保采取适当行动促进健康行为方面发挥着重要作用。随着世界卫生组织关于5岁以下儿童身体活动、久坐行为和睡眠的指南的发布,人们越来越有兴趣研究全球幼儿在日常生活中如何感知和体验这些运动行为。然而,对幼儿进行定性研究面临许多挑战,包括确定合适的方法(访谈类型)、制定适当的问题(术语、翻译)、建立关系(照顾者/教育工作者在场、激励措施)、管理权力动态,同时适应COVID-19施加的限制。在进行跨文化、语言和社会经济不同人群的国际研究时,额外的复杂性就会发挥作用。这篇文章描述了我们的研究小组在考虑澳大利亚、智利、中国、印度、摩洛哥和南非的不同背景影响对幼儿运动行为如何概念化的影响时的反思。讨论了在这些不同背景下工作的复杂性,并反映了这对方法决策和数据解释的影响。虽然世卫组织指南(2019年)具有普遍性,但全球幼儿在日常安排方面存在很大差异,从受到高度监督到独立玩耍,他们在运动行为体验方面有不同程度的选择权。这表明我们需要一种细致入微的方法来进一步研究和解决不同国家背景下的运动行为,同时考虑到社会和文化规范。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Qualitative Methods
International Journal of Qualitative Methods SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
11.10%
发文量
139
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal Highlights Impact Factor: 5.4 Ranked 5/110 in Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary – SSCI Indexed In: Clarivate Analytics: Social Science Citation Index, the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), and Scopus Launched In: 2002 Publication is subject to payment of an article processing charge (APC) Submit here International Journal of Qualitative Methods (IJQM) is a peer-reviewed open access journal which focuses on methodological advances, innovations, and insights in qualitative or mixed methods studies. Please see the Aims and Scope tab for further information.
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